Big Tech Doesn't Want You Anymore
Big Tech is slashing hundreds of thousands of jobs and blaming artificial intelligence, but there may be more to the story than that. Intel just announced fifteen thousand layoffs yesterday, causing their stock price to plunge. Big Tech, who for over a decade provided all sorts of employee perks may no longer be the dream place to work. In 2009, a friend of mine who had quit his job
in investment banking joked that in the wake of the financial crisis, being an investment banker was like being an airline stewardess. The job used to be glamorous and well paid and now it was neither. After the financial crisis, central banks around the world slashed interest rates to near zero – which was bad for banks, but good for startups and the tech industry. According to the St Louis Fed, over the five years after the financial crisis, jobs in the tech sector expanded by more than twenty percent – compared to 11 percent job growth in the overall US economy. Tech sector wages, which were already high,
grew at roughly 5 percent per year over the same period. It became the place to be. While other businesses offered employees benefits like pensions and healthcare, tech firms attracted staff by offering perks like free food, offices that looked like playgrounds, nap pods, the ability to bring your pets to work, on-site massages, meditation rooms, office jam sessions- at Spotify and something called disco yoga. Google and Facebook offered employees a free laundry service – which is only so much of a perk – when their employees mostly wear shorts and t shirts. I dunno, maybe the laundry service went to their homes and picked their dirty laundry up from their bedroom floors… That’s probably what it was. To seem relatable, tech workers began posting “day in the life” videos on social media mostly showing themselves playing ping pong and eating berries at work. [Clip]
In 2020, the global pandemic transformed how people lived, worked, educated their children and spent their free time. The world rapidly moved online, and the surge of e-commerce and consumer tech spending led to massive revenue growth at big tech. Central banks around the world slashed interest rates even further and tech firms took that cheap money, significantly stepping up their investments in moonshot projects like self-driving cars, metaverses and crypto. Facebook – who went so far as to change the company name to Meta – to demonstrate their commitment to – whatever the metaverse is - hired a ton of people during this period, with headcount up 60% by the end of 2021. During this boom period the megacap tech firms’ combined increase in headcount was 35%, or almost 130 thousand new jobs, and the lavish deals they had given their employees redefined employment expectations in the entire economy.
The big tech firms were already rated as the best firms to work for with Google – or Alphabet having been ranked number one, eight times between 2006 and 2018 on the Fortune list of best companies to work for list. Justin Fox at Bloomberg points out that there had been an acceleration in hiring even before the pandemic, which explains why tech CEOs might have thought that the growth they were seeing during the pandemic represented a new normal, rather than a temporary effect. By the end of the pandemic, they had hired almost 200 thousand more people in the US than they would have if they had stuck to their prior hiring trend. The tech stock sell off that started in 2022 put big tech companies under pressure to improve their bottom lines and they laid off some of the excess staff that had been hired to meet the pandemic boom. Twitter led the way with layoffs when its new owner reportedly laid off half of the employees within a month of taking over the company, breaking the taboo of tech layoffs making it easier for other big firms to lay off staff without standing out from the crowd. Big tech has been making significant cuts, and the layoffs don’t seem to be ending. According
to Layoffs.fyi a website monitoring job cuts in the tech sector there were 165 thousand tech sector layoffs in 2022, 260 thousand in 2023 and there have been 125 thousand so far this year. The tech firms are still reporting good earnings, and the AI boom is still in full swing, overall jobs growth in the United States has been strong if slowing slightly and workers pay has been outpacing inflation, so why are tech workers losing their jobs, where are they going, and which roles are disappearing the fastest? Is working for Big Tech no longer a dream job? Learning a little every day is one of the most important things you can do, both for personal and professional growth. Today’s sponsor Brilliant dot org helps you build real knowledge in minutes a day with fun lessons you can do whenever you have time. Brilliant is a learning platform designed to be uniquely effective as each lesson involves hands-on problem solving that lets you play around with concepts so that you learn by doing rather than by memorization Brilliant’s growing number of programming courses are a great way to build foundations and learn real-world applications. Using the app you can learn essential coding elements, from
loops and variables to nesting and conditionals. Brilliant’s problem-solving approach to learning doesn’t just help you learn specific topics but helps you to become a better thinker. Their content is crafted by an award-winning team of teachers, researchers, and professionals from MIT, Caltech, Duke, Microsoft, Google, and more. I’m told it’s six times more effective learning with an interactive app than just watching a lecture. With Brilliant you learn by trying things out for yourself, which is what makes learning with Brilliant both fun and powerful.
To try everything Brilliant has to offer for free for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/Patrick or click on the link in the description. You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription. In 2024 the YouTube and LinkedIn trend of posting day in the life of a tech worker videos reversed course. The new videos were called “A day in the life of an out of work tech worker” and they seemed a lot less fun. For some reason these young tech workers hold their
microphones in their hands in their videos, which I worry makes them less employable, as if you don’t understand the technology of a mic stand – which is a stick – you don’t seem that up to date with technology. I mentioned this issue to a friend who told me that young people do this to seem more personable – so I thought I would give it a go. Hopefully I seem more relatable now. The audio quality should still be good – because - this isn’t actually plugged in – I’m trying to seem relatable, not to have bad audio.
According to the FT a lot of the tech lay-offs are happening as companies are reshuffling their resources in order to invest in new areas such as generative AI while showing shareholders there is a continued focus on cost discipline. They highlight Meta, which cut more than 20,000 jobs since late 2022 who said in February that net headcount additions for the year will be “minimal” even as they made “significant investments” in generative AI, which would involve securing talent. The result has been a wipe-out in tech jobs and for the first time since the dot-com bubble burst, IT unemployment is actually higher than U.S. unemployment overall. I have to stop with this microphone thing – it’s ridiculous. I’ll put a link to a mic stand in the video description to help out any of my younger viewers who are not familiar with that technology. The tech stock sell-off of 2022 led tech companies to evaluate their workforces and realize that they had a lot of dead wood. And if they had leaner organizations,
they could be more profitable. And as they cut staff their stock prices started to rise. According to the Washington Post, as stocks have risen spirits in the San Francisco Bay area (the heart of the US tech industry) have only fallen further. The layoff announcements from big tech companies all contained variations on the theme of “we hired too many people during the boom years.” While things are tough in the tech sector – BLS data shows that the ratio of job openings to job seekers is quite good. There are 8.2 million job openings and only 7.1 million job seekers. Unfortunately, a lot of the job openings are in areas like education, healthcare, hospitality transportation and utilities – not tech.
According to the press, a lot of the tech layoffs have been in ESG areas where the big tech firms have started abandoning their woke policies as part of their cost cutting. The New York Post reported that Microsoft laid off a team devoted to diversity, equity and inclusion after spending millions of dollars on the initiative. One of the signs of their over-hiring may have been the woman they hired away from the land registry who would read the property title before every meeting. [Clip] Maybe I should look up who owned this office
before me – say something nice about them… I dunno… Last year, Alphabet and Meta – or Google and Facebook… reduced the scope of their DEI programs and cut staff. Zoom, Snap, Tesla, DoorDash, Lyft and Wayfair have also downsized their DEI teams. The Post reports that DEI-related job postings had declined by 44% by mid-2023 compared to the same period in 2022. Despite these layoffs, Microsoft told the Post that their Diversity and Inclusion commitments remain unchanged. Merryn Somerset Webb wrote in Bloomberg earlier this year that ESG and DEI policies had turned out to be low interest rate environment Luxury Goods. She highlights the pullback from these policies across both the public and corporate sectors. In the UK, the Financial Reporting Council just opted against including ESG requirements in the UK Corporate Governance Code and BlackRock’s CEO Larry Fink – once a champion of ESG rarely mentions it anymore.
Mentions of DEI and ESG in company earnings calls have plummeted too, since interest rates started to rise as has their prominence in corporate presentations. A recent paper from the University of Copenhagen suggests that even amongst retail investors, ESG investing is a luxury good where demand for it increases disproportionally with the scale of inherited wealth. Tech, just like finance can be a boom-and-bust industry where workers are paid well but there is a lot of career volatility. People who have been in either industry for a full market cycle are usually aware of this and know to save their money when the times are good. I’m reminded of a story a friend told me of hiring at an investment bank in the late 1990’s. He said that it was so hard to hire at the time that he found himself making offers to the type of candidate that he would never have considered in prior years as he just needed to fill seats. During the slowdown of the early 2000’s he let all of those people go.
During the US tech sector’s last high-growth phase from 1990 to 2000, national employment in the tech industry shot up by 36 percent over the period according to Federal Reserve data. Average weekly wages for tech workers doubled, rising by 102 percent over the decade. At its peak in 2000, tech employment accounted for just over 4 percent of total private employment. When the dot com bubble burst, technology sector employment declined rapidly, with significant net job losses for four straight years. By the time it bottomed out in 2004, the sector’s workforce had shrunk by almost 18 percent and tech employment declined to 3.4 percent of total private employment. From 2010 through to 2022 job growth in the
tech sector once again hugely outpaced job growth in the rest of the economy and most tech workers under the age of thirty-five have never seen a slowdown. The FT reported earlier this year that the tech layoffs in 2024 appear to be more strategic, as job cuts in 2024 have come alongside “active hiring.” Meta, which cut more than 20,000 jobs since late 2022 said in February that net headcount additions for the year would be “minimal” even as it made “significant investments” in generative AI, which would include securing talent. SAP announced a “company-wide transformation” in January that involves 8,000 layoffs as they increase their focus on AI. They said that their staff numbers would stay about the same but that they would be reskilling.
This reskilling process is extremely painful for tech workers, as it usually involves being laid off and requalifying. I saw a LinkedIn post earlier this week on how there are both - too few and too many software engineers right now because of a huge skills mismatch in the software development industry. The author wrote that there had been a huge boom of people coming into software development and training as web developers, but companies now want to hire people with skills in AI, Machine Learning, Data Analysis and things like that. The writer argued that Big
Tech needs to hire the best people and then train them as necessary. It might be too disruptive turning over your workforce constantly. While layoffs are happening at these high-profile tech firms, they aren’t happening in every department. According to Robert Half – a recruiting firm - a sizable portion of the layoffs at Big Tech have not been technology professionals but those in other departments. 365 Data Science looked into which roles were
most affected by the Tech Layoffs and found that HR specialists and recruiters made up almost 28% of the layoffs. They also found that this group were finding replacement jobs most quickly. This makes a lot of sense as these people are not really tied to the tech industry – they can work at any big firm. The researchers found that 19% of the laid off tech workers who found new jobs had moved to smaller software development firms and 13% had moved to internet companies. They found that the majority of rehired workers continued their careers outside of tech. Among them, 10% moved to financial services, 8% moved to the services industry, 7% to consulting, 6% to manufacturing and 34% to other industries.
Because the majority of tech jobs are outside of the tech industry and tech skills are still in high demand in other industries, many of these people are doing just fine – but possibly struggling a bit with the culture clash of no longer getting to play ping pong and eat free berries in the office. Unfortunately, the researchers found that the majority of laid off tech workers are still on the job market, competing for the type of roles they had recently been laid off from during hiring freezes and continuing layoffs. These people are mostly highly qualified with a lot of work experience. We will have to see how long they remain on the job market, or if they switch careers. A study from The Brookings Institute found that tech sector jobs have started spreading out around the country since the pandemic. San Francisco and San Jose disappeared from the list of metro areas gaining the highest shares of digital employment. Replacing them have been metro areas like Dallas, Denver, Miami, and Salt Lake City. A report on pay trends from ZipRecruiter found
that 48% of 2,000 US companies surveyed lowered pay for certain roles last year and 41% of employers said that a position has gone unfilled in the past 6 months because candidates wanted more pay than the company was able to offer. According to the report, companies are not just taking advantage during a difficult job market to cut costs. In some cases, stagnant and even lowered salaries are the result of a reset for a pandemic era surge in compensation when companies were scrambling to fill roles during the Great Resignation.
This phenomenon of falling wages is being seen mostly in the United States because of how its economy rebounded from the Pandemic. During the rebound wage growth in the United States outpaced that of the UK and Europe, and now that its resetting, the pinch is being felt most in the United States. One of the perks of working at a hot tech firm during the boom period was getting a chunk of your compensation in the form of stock options, which a lot of high growth tech companies liked to think of as being free, rather than as a deferred expense, that is eventually paid for when the options vest. We see this cost today in the massive stock buybacks which have to happen at firms like Salesforce to keep their share count from rising and earnings per share from falling. Bloomberg reported in May that insiders at magnificent seven tech companies have been selling their shares after going nine years without any significant sales. Senior management may be less bullish than
the general public are. The Magnificent seven tech stocks had risen nearly 150% since the start of 2023, partly because of investors excitement over artificial intelligence. Jeff Bezos netted about $8.5 billion dollars selling Amazon stock over a two-week period in February. This was his first sale of Amazon stock since 2021. Mark Zuckerberg sold a billion
dollars’ worth of Meta stock last November. Sundar Pichai of Alphabet sold more stock in the first few months of this year than in all of 2023. Nvidia director Mark Perry sold more stock at the start of this year than in the previous two years combined and Apple chairman Arthur Levinson filed in February to sell his biggest block of stock in more than twenty years. This isn’t just happening at the companies that are doing well. Tesla’s Chair Robyn Denholm filed
to sell about $52 million dollars’ worth of stock this year, her first sale since 2022. Some of the luster has come off big tech in recent weeks, with the Nasdaq more than 11% off its high from a few weeks ago. The downturn followed underwhelming outlooks from the biggest tech companies, along with a bad jobs number. Intel lost more than a quarter of its value this Friday after announcing plans to slash headcount and capital spending, as it suffered further setbacks in its slow-moving turnaround plans. Its price is below where it traded in 1997. Other semiconductor stocks like ASML and Tokyo Electron fell too. Microsoft’s AI-fueled cloud growth fell short
of investor expectations earlier this week and the stock is down about 11% over the last month, but it is still up about 10% year to date. The scale of capex by the big US tech companies based on a belief that AI will transform the world amounts to the biggest and fastest, infrastructure rollout in history according to the Financial Times. Big Tech is expected to spend a half a trillion dollars over the next two years – much of it on data centers powered by Nvidia GPU’s.
From a financial perspective we have to ask who will benefit from this spending and when will the returns on investment start rolling in? Researchers from MIT argued in a recent report that the technology isn’t designed to solve the complex problems that would justify the costs, which may not decline as many expect. The economist wrote last year about how the big tech firms were no longer showing up at on campus recruiting events at top US colleges like Berkeley. Students who were hoping for internships at FAANG companies were now talking to firms like Juniper Networks – an ancient company that had been founded all the way back in 1996. They report that some computer-science majors have had their internships cancelled and those with job offers have had their start dates pushed back. Apparently, students are now seeking stable employment rather than big brand names on their CV’s since the waves of layoffs started. One student told the Economist that she had realized that she hadn’t actually wanted to work in Big Tech before the lay-offs and is relieved she didn’t get sucked into it. She
hopes to work as a product designer at a small company, where she can get “solid experience rather than just chasing a bigger name”. Stanford professor Jeffrey Pfeffer wrote in the Stanford Report that he is concerned that the tech layoffs could spread across other industries, he wrote that “Layoffs are contagious across industries and within industries. So why did the big tech firms move so aggressively to cut staff? Well, a big part of it was just because they had simply over hired. Are layoffs the best move
in a challenging business environment, or is there something else they could have done? Well, they could have announced goals to increase margins (for example) to shore up the stock price. But then they would be held accountable to achieving those goals. When they announce layoffs and the clearing out of dead wood, they get to do that and move on, having shown that they’re serious about margins and costs. It’s an easy fix. So, if, as the Economist says, Big Tech no longer wants you, where can you go? Well as I mentioned earlier the majority of tech jobs in the United States are not at the big tech firms. The other sectors who hire tech workers may now be
able to hire some top talent that previously they couldn’t. Some of the recently laid off tech workers might opt to start their own companies too and bring new products and ideas to the market. Most of today’s tech giants grew out of the ashes of the dot com bust. If you found this video interesting, you should watch my video on what’s happening with electric vehicle sales next. Don’t forget to check out our sponsor Brilliant dot org using the link in the description. Have a great day and see you in the next video. Bye.
2024-08-08 17:20